What diseases does prostatitis have?
1. Pain: the posterior urethra has burning sensation and ant movement sensation. The pain in the vulva and anus can radiate to the waist bottom, abdomen and thigh, supraphalangeal area, male genitals, male testicles, etc., and occasionally to the abdominal cavity.
2. Urinary system disease: inflammation invades the urethral orifice, and the patient has slight frequency, urgency and pain in urination.
3. Erectile dysfunction: low libido, erectile dysfunction, early ejaculation, painless ejaculation, frequent increase, etc. Some patients have ejaculation
4. Mental asthenia disease: patients lack correct understanding or treatment
5. Secondary diseases: hypersensitive reactions caused by pathogenic bacteria endotoxin can cause keratitis, iritis, rheumatism, peripheral neuritis, etc.
Although the prevalence of prostatitis is very high, not all men have prostatitis. Only some special families, such as alcoholics, excessive lusters, sex abusers, car drivers and immunocompromised people, have a variety of situations, which shows that many bad habits and other adverse factors in life are high-risk factors. At the present stage, the treatment of diffuse prostatitis is not satisfactory. Disease prevention seems to be very important. Living and living are effective. Scientific self-regulation is an important countermeasure to prevent prostatitis.
Prostate disease has been masturbating frequently for a long time. There is a certain relationship between husband and wife's life, long sitting, and diet combination. Patients suffering from this disease should be treated immediately to avoid damaging male function and pregnancy. It is difficult to cure diffuse prostatitis, and the treatment of prostatitis is important. The reason for the current treatment plan is that traditional Chinese medicine and western medicine should be combined.
Prostatitis is a disease of the prostate caused by a variety of complex reasons, with urethral irritation and diffuse pelvic pain as important clinical symptoms. Prostatitis is a common disease in urology, ranking first among male patients under 50 years old in urology. The prevalence of prostatitis is very high, but the cause of its incidence is still unclear, especially the non-bacterial infection of prostatitis, which is dominated by treatment and improvement. In 1996, the National University Institute of Environmental Health (NIH) developed a new classification method for prostatitis. Type I: subacute bacterial infection prostatitis in the traditional classification method, type II: diffuse bacterial infection prostatitis in the traditional classification method, type II: diffuse prostatitis/diffuse pelvic pain syndrome type I: asymptomatic prostatitis. Nonbacterial prostatitis is much higher than bacterial prostatitis.
The main clinical manifestations are
Type I prostatitis often occurs suddenly in urine, mainly manifested by chills, fever and fatigue
The clinical manifestations of type ii and type iii prostatitis are similar, with more pain and abnormal urination. Any type of diffuse prostatitis can be characterized by similar clinical manifestations, commonly known as prostatitis syndrome, including pelvic sacral pain, dysuria and erectile dysfunction. Pelvic sacral pain is mainly very complex. The pain is generally located in the phalanx, lumbar floor and vulva. Radiation pain is mainly manifested in urethral orifice, seminal curvature, male testicle, abdominal thigh and abdominal side pain. The abdominal radiation looks like acute abdomen, and the radiation looks like colic along the urethra, which usually causes misdiagnosis. Abnormal urination is mainly manifested as frequent urination, urgent urination, inability to hold urine, painful urination, poor urination, bifurcated urination, urination after urination, increased urination frequency at night, and milky white necessities discharged from the urethral orifice after urination or during urination. Sometimes high altitude is accompanied by erectile dysfunction, including low libido, early ejaculation, painful ejaculation, weak rigidity, and erectile dysfunction.
There is no clinical manifestation of type IV prostatitis. Only the examination of the level of the male prostate found direct evidence of inflammation.